Taking part in a wine tasting evening with like-minded friends has got to be one of the best ways you can pass the time. At such events, it’s not uncommon for fresh white bread, cheese and other snacks to be served to “cleanse the palate” as you move on from one wine to the next, and to prevent the wine going to your head too quickly! But, at professional wine tastings, things are different – snacks are never served, and the wine isn’t swallowed either!
It’s during the month of March, that the start of the wine tasting season begins once again. Over the following months, as new vintages are bottled and delivered, professional tasters will see their diaries filling and a very busy schedule developing. And, it’s no coincidence that all the major wine fairs – which are usually for trade visitors only – will soon be underway too. Prowein, which is held in Düsseldorf in Germany in mid-March, pretty much launches the wine year for professional buyers and journalists. Spring then ushers in the other important European fairs such as Vinitaly in Verona and the London Wine Trade Fair here in the UK. But interestingly, the manner in which professional tasters undertake their craft at these fairs stands in marked contrast to the usual etiquette of a social tasting hosted by the local wine merchant or winery. Not only is there a tremendously greater selection of wines on offer, there are also practices that the layperson might find rather surprising!
First rule of professional wine tasting: Never swallow the wine!
That’s right, it is absolutely taboo to swallow the wine at a professional tasting! After analysing a sample of the wine, the taster will spit his sip into specially provided container – it’s a necessity, really; because of the sheer volume of wines being tasted, a hardworking taster might well get through more than a hundred samples in a day. A further distinction between professional tastings and the convivial wine tastings that we are more familiar with is the total lack of bread or similar snacks that people tuck into to “cleanse the palate” between wines. Actually, bread isn’t as neutral as people believe; it has quite a significant influence on our sense of taste. To a certain extent, the starch in the bread is converted to sugar during chewing, and this causes the wine’s acids to taste more prominent than they actually are.
It’s not necessary to cleanse one’s palate after tasting each wine
What is true for bread also applies to nuts and almonds, which are also often served at genial wine tastings – a practice that leaves professionals aghast! It really isn’t at all necessary to cleanse the palate between tastings because the flavour of the subsequent wine almost immediately erases that of the previous one. Only when changing between types of wine – such as when going from very heavy reds to light white wines, and particularly when going from sweet to dry wines – will a professional taster take a sip of water (preferably still), to make sure he/she has a neutral palate for the next round of tastings.
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